Seminar : Protein trafficking to lipids bodies/droplets during the phases of fat

Abstract : As a major actor of cellular trafficking, COPI coat proteins assemble on membranes and locally bend them to bud 60 nm-size coated particles. Budding requires the energy of the coat assembly to overcome the one necessary to deform the membrane which primarily depends on the bending modulus and surface tension, γ. Using a COPI-induced oil nanodroplet formation approach, we modulated the budding of nanodroplets using various amounts and types of surfactant. We found a Heaviside-like dependence between the budding efficiency and γ: budding was only dependent on γ and occurred beneath 1.3 mN/m. With the sole contribution of γ to the membrane deformation energy, we assessed that COPI supplies ~1500 kBT for budding particles from membranes, which is consistent with common membrane deformation energies. Our results highlight how a simple remodeling of the composition of membranes could mechanically modulate budding in cells.

by Abdou Rachid Thiam.

Seminar : Experimental study of contact line dissipation and wetting dynamics at liquid interfaces

Abstract: An atomic force microscopy (AFM) based hanging fiber probe is developed to investigate contact line dissipation. A universal scaling law, ξ = απdη, is obtained for various liquids (and soap films) of viscosity η and glass fibers of diameter d with different surface chemistries. The proportionality constant α is found to be α = 0.8 ± 0.2, independent of the contact angle and surface tension. The AFM system is also used to study wetting transition and contact angle hysteresis at a DPPC-monolayer interface.
by Shuo Guo from Hong-Kong University of Science and Technology and now at the LPS.